Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Cherfilus-McCormick launches reelection campaign; issues call for unity among Dems

Gains support of Sharief, who was opponent in ’21

- By Anthony Man

Congresswo­man Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, who faces a primary rematch with the candidate she defeated last year by five votes, kicked off her reelection campaign with a call for — and a show of — Democratic unity.

She launched her campaign with a notable new supporter: Barbara Sharief, who finished third in the fiercely fought 2021 special Democratic primary that sent Cherfilus-McCormick to Congress.

Also supporting the new congresswo­man’s reelection: Maisha Williams, the late Congressma­n Alcee Hastings’ stepdaught­er — who Cherfilus-McCormick ran against twice, in 2018 and 2020.

Getting started

Cherfilus-McCormick has been in office about 110 days. One of the central themes in remarks to supporters was that Democrats should be unified, and not devote time and energy to a divisive party primary.

“We can’t afford to have Democrats fighting Democrats,” Cherfilus-McCormick said. So much is at stake, energy ought to be focused on “continuing the work that we started, continuing the fight against Republican­s.”

Cherfilus-McCormick

said she can do so, constructi­vely. “It’s so important that we elect a leader who can continue the fight, who can fight the fight diplomatic­ally, who understand the needs of the community,” she said.

Hastings died on April 6, 2021, but Gov. Ron DeSantis delayed calling special primary and general elections for months — keeping the Democratic seat vacant for more than nine months, far longer than governors have waited in recent decades.

“District 20 was silenced for nine months. Every moment I have to speak about what needs to be done, to influence what needs to be done, I take those opportunit­ies,” she said.

She cited inflation, including gas prices and the high cost of housing in South Florida — and said one solution is further upping the annual cost of living increases that go to Social Security recipients so they can meet their needs in retirement.

She also said there’s a need to counter what she sees coming every day from Republican­s.

“Every morning we wake up” and it seems as if a different Republican is targeting the LGBTQ community — “trying to equate gay people to be some kind of weirdos, which isn’t true. We’re all good people.”

Other Republican­s, she said, exhibit xenophobia, “equating immigrants to drug dealers and robbers” coming to the United States to commit sexual

assaults.

Sharief

In politics, opponents in one election often become allies in the next. And that’s what’s happened with Cherfilus-McCormick and Sharief.

Sharief said she “absolutely” supports Cherfilus-McCormick in the congressio­nal primary. “I want her to be able to fight and maintain her seat.”

And Cherfilus-McCormick is supporting Sharief ’s campaign for the Florida Senate. Sharief, a former Broward County commission­er and former Miramar city commission­er, is running against state Sen. Lauren Book in a Democratic primary in District 35, in southern and western Broward. Sharief ’s primary contest with Book isn’t the kind of internal party unity Cherfilus McCormick called for in her speech.

Book is the Senate Democratic leader, and the contest with Sharief could be the most contentiou­s and consequent­ial legislativ­e primary in Florida this year.

The alliance between Cherfilus-McCormick and Sharief hasn’t been formally announced, but the mutual support was acknowledg­ed by both candidates in interviews after Sharief slipped into Cherfilus-McCormick’s reelection campaign kickoff Monday night in Tamarac.

“We had a tough relationsh­ip” during last year’s primary, said Cherfilus-McCormick, who called Sharief to invite her to Monday night’s event.

But she also pointed to their similariti­es.

Cherfilus-McCormick, a lawyer, was CEO of Trinity Health Care Services, a home health care company before she was elected to Congress. Sharief, a nurse practition­er with a doctorate in nursing practice, is owner and CEO of South Florida Pediatric Homecare.

Both live in Miramar — and both planned to run for Congress before the April 6, 2021, death of Hastings.

Cherfilus-McCormick said she and other residents of South Florida “need someone in the state [Legislatur­e] who’s a hard worker.”

Political landscape

Cherfilus-McCormick is facing a rematch with Dale Holness, who lost by five votes out of 49,082 cast in the special Democratic primary to pick a replacemen­t for Hastings.

Cherfilus-McCormick and Holness each had 23.8% of the vote, Sharief had 17.7%, and eight other candidates split the rest.

In the overwhelmi­ngly Democratic district, the primary winner was essentiall­y the guaranteed winner of the special general election, on Jan. 11, in which she received 79% of the vote.

Cherfilus-McCormick and Holness are running in a reconfigur­ed 20th Congressio­nal District in Broward and Palm Beach counties. It still takes in most of the African American and Caribbean American communitie­s in the two counties, but the boundaries of all congressio­nal districts are changing this year to reflect population shifts uncovered in the 2020 Census.

Cherfilus-McCormick is the first Haitian Democrat elected to Congress. Holness, a former Broward County commission­er and Lauderhill city commission­er, is Jamaican American.

The 2021 special primary was about six months ago, the special general election was four months ago, and the 2022 primary is about three months from now.

Though she’s now the incumbent, Cherfilus-McCormick told her supporters that they face hard work leading up to the Aug. 23 primary. “

“It’s going to be a hard fight. It is. I’m not going to lie to anybody. We’re dealing with a district that has changed. We have three months to win those people over.” Recalling assessment­s from people early in 2021 who said “we had no chance,” Cherfilus-McCormick said “we’re going to show everybody what we’ve got.”

The winner of the Democratic primary is all-but-guaranteed to win the November election. An analysis from political data analyst Matthew Isbell of the firm MCI Maps found that 76% of the new district’s voters went for Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden in the 2020 election.

Supporters

About 90 people attended the campaign kickoff at the Colony West County Club in Tamarac. It was typical in that the candidate’s supporters milled about snacking on finger foods and Cherfilus-McCormick moved through the group talking with her supporters and posing for pictures.

It was unusual in one respect: there wasn’t a long list of warm-up speakers touting the candidate, just a brief introducti­on from former Broward Democratic Chairman Mitch Ceasar.

The audience was diverse, and included some people running for political office, and people active in organized labor and the LGBTQ community.

“This is testament that it doesn’t matter if you’re a woman, if you’re a man, if you’re gay, if you’re white, if you’re Black, if you’re Jewish. None of that matters,” said Cherfilus-McCormick. “Look at our faces. We come from every aspect, every place in the world, and we’re still here as one people, one body, fighting one fight … We’re one people. We’re fathers, mothers, daughters, wives, husbands. We’re all the same.”

Williams — Hastings’ stepdaught­er who also worked in his office — said many people are startled when they learn she is working in Cherfilus-McCormick’s office. She said she was offended the first time Cherfilus-McCormick ran against her dad. The second time, she began to reassess.

“I love Dale Holness. He’s a friend of the family. [But] I don’t think we need a replacemen­t,” she said.

She said she’s come to see Cherfilus-McCormick as the political heir to Hastings, carrying on his decades of advocacy. “Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick is an Alcee Hastings. She’s just female and younger.”

 ?? JOHN MCCALL/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick kicks off her campaign during an event Monday at Colony West Country Club in Tamarac.
JOHN MCCALL/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick kicks off her campaign during an event Monday at Colony West Country Club in Tamarac.
 ?? JOHN MCCALL/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick takes a selfie with her sister Twana during her campaign kick off event.
JOHN MCCALL/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick takes a selfie with her sister Twana during her campaign kick off event.
 ?? ANTHONY MAN/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? Former Broward County Commission­er Barbara Sharief, left, and U.S. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick speak during the congresswo­man’s 2022 campaign kickoff in Tamarac on Monday. Sharief and Cherfilus McCormick were opponents in the special Democratic congressio­nal primary in 2021.
ANTHONY MAN/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL Former Broward County Commission­er Barbara Sharief, left, and U.S. Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick speak during the congresswo­man’s 2022 campaign kickoff in Tamarac on Monday. Sharief and Cherfilus McCormick were opponents in the special Democratic congressio­nal primary in 2021.

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